National Affairs: How's That?

No man could say that General Ike Eisenhower had so much as cleared his
throat to help the Eisenhower-for-President boom. But there was a
sparkle in his eye.

Last week, in Washington, he held a press conference at the insistence
of War Department reporters. In his big, deep-carpeted office, Ike
blandly assumed that they wanted to hear about his recent Army
inspection trip, and began talking.

He was soon stopped. A newsman asked for comment on an
Eisenhower-for-President club which had recently sprung up in the
capital, complete with secretaries and literature....